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COCHISE REVIEW
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JOB PRINTING
The Review Job Depart-
raent is equipped to do first t
class commercial printing. V
THE DISPATCHES
Receivrrf -
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BISBEE, AEIZONA, TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBEK 4, 1900.
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VOLUME IV. '
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PROFESSIONAL ,, J
A. D. UPTON
ATTOIWiEX-AT-TLAW
AGENT FOR LAND SCRIP
Tombstone, Arizona.
J M. O'CONNELL
ATTORNKY-AT-LAW
office: WALLACE BUILDINQ
BISBEB
YILLimi J. KILPATIUCK
, -4 ATTORNEY-AT-I.AW
MO W. Pennlueton St., Tucson, Arl.
' Will practice In nil Courti of the Territory.
JyAROUS A. SMITH
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
TUCSON, ARIZONA
Will practice in District Court of Cochise
County.
QHARLBS BLBHMAN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
TUCSON, ARIZONA
Will attend ail terms of Court In Coohise
County.
JRAXX B. HKBKTOBD 9BTH E. HAEZABD
HEREFORD A HAZZARD
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
TUC90N, ARIZONA
AGENTS FOR LAND SCRIP
K. CHAMBERS
DENTIST
Appointments Made by Mail
PHONB 87 BISBEE
DR
J. W. FARRINGTON
DENTIST
BISBEE, ARIZONA
Specialties Diseases of the oral cavity and
irown and bridco work. All operations per
formed. p A. SWEET, M. D. Tkl. No. a
W. A. GREENE, M. D.
E. G. OARLETON. M. D
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
the Copper Queen Consolidated Minln?
Co. and A. A S. E. R. R.
QB. ISAAC H. WATKINS
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
BENSON. ARIZONA
Office : Rear of Drug Store.
K. WILLIAMS
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
BISBEE, ARIZONA
Notary Publlo and Conveyancer. Bill col
lecting a ipeolnlty.
gOOIETY PRINTING
Cochise Rxvxew Job Ojjice
We are thoroughly equppied to do all
kind of Booletv Printing in a first-clais
manner.
RAILROAD TIME TABLES.
Arizona & South Eastern Railroad
Paolflo Time one hour earlier than City time
Northward
Southward
1
8i
m
S3
123
M OS
M
S
a. M. Miles.
Stationb
"Mil
Z2.
es. P. M.
o:co
8)05
8:1
6:25
8:82
S:M
7i07
7:21
7U0
7iM
7:65
8:10
8:00
0
18
4.0
8.8
U.
19.4
25.2
80.0
S.8
87.6
39.6
4S.8
55.8
Lv...Bisbee
.Arl
66.8
M.O
C1.8
46.6
42.9
85.9
80.1
15.8
19.0
17.7
15.7
9.5
0
1:30
1:22
1:10
13:53
12:15
12:25
12:05
11:45
11:25
11:15
11:00
10:40
A.M.
10:00
1:8
South BIsbee..
2:7
Tlon T.ilU
4
NsooJunotlon..
8:6
Pnnlfnrd
7:0
'....Banning
WntAr TT,lr.
4:8
... Charleston...
6:8
Ar..Falrbank .Lv
Lv.JTairbank.Ar
1:8
N.M A A. Crossing
z:u
. Contention . . .
6)2
Land
9:5
Ar. .. Benson. ..Lv
' Flag Stations stop on Signal.
V. R. STILES,
G.F.AP.A.
R. C. MORGAN.
Superintendent.
Southern Pacific Railroad.
WEBTBOUND.
. Pass.
Benson, leave 4:57 p.m.
Tucson, arrlvo .. 7:20 "
Maricopa, " . ... 9:40 "
Phoenix, ' 6:S0n.m.
Passengers for Phoonix, from the east or
West, remain at Maricopa over night. Sleep
ing car and hotel accommodation.
Yuma, nrrlvo . 3:00 a.m.
Los Angeles, arrlvo . 12: noon.
KABTDOUND.
Benson, leave . ... 9:06 u. m.
Wlllcox, errlvo . ..10:42 "
Bowie, " 11:55 "
Lordsburg, " 1:45p.m.
Deming " .. 8:80 "
ElPoso. .... " 6:00 "
- New Mexico and Arizona Railroad.
WESTBOUND.
Pass.
Benson, leave 5:30 p. m.
Fairbank, arrive 6:13 "
tfogalcs, " 9:00 '
EASTDOUND.
Nogalos, leave ...5:10a.m.
Fairbank, arrive . . 7:57 "
Benson, " 8:10 '
Sonorn Railroad.
SO0THBOOKD.
Pass.
Nogales, leave 10:05 p.m.
Hermoslllo, arrlvo 5:15 a.m.
Guaymas, . . " 9:10 "
HOKTHBOUND.
Ouaymas, leave 6:00 p.m.
Hermoslllo, arrive 9:83 "
Nogale " B:00 a.m.
Santa IT Prescott and Phoenix Railroad.
NOBTUDOU.1D.
Phoenix, leave .... 10:00p.m.
Hot Springs Junct., arrlvo 11:47 "
Congress Junct., ...." 12:55a.m.
PWscott. ".. 4:28 "
Jerome Junct., " 5:80"
Aihfork " 7:85 '
A DESPERATE fCUD.
Undertook to Graze Sheep hi
onto Basin.
fighting Continued Over a Year--torv
of the famous War.
Numbers Killed.
His-
"Tho most desperate feud ever
known in the southwest grew out of an
attempt to graze sheep in Pleasant val
ley, in upper Tonto Basin, Arizona.
The noted Towksbury brothers under
took the engineering of the operation.
They succeeded. But when the sheep
side of the controversy had forged to
the front thirty-two men were. dead.
Tho casualties were not incurred in
pitohed engagements. The fighting
continued during a year or longer in
the late eighties. It was dono in Ken
tucky vendetta style. Most of the men
who 'went over the divide' were am
bushed on mountain trails and shot in
the back.
A Tewksbury household wasbesoiged
by a dozen members of the Graham
faction, the opposing party. When an
old man, Al Rose, went out in the early
morning for a pail of water, he was
shot and killed within fifty, feet of the
doorstep. And there the corpse lay
unburied for three days in the full
glare of tho summer sun. Tho men
withlt. the house, stolid in their Buffer
ing from thirst, appealed for permis
sion to bury their dead. Tt was domed
them.
This is only a fair sample of the atro
cities that marked the progress of the
feud. Tho Pleasant valloy war ended
only when all the surviving rombatantsf
together with most of their neighbors
were gathered up and taken to Pres
cott by a squadron of Yavapai county
officers, headed by Sheriff William
O'Neill, the same 'Buckey' O'Neill
who was killed before San Juan hill,
leading his troop of Rough Riders.
A soothing influence was atso exerted
by Sheriff Commodore Owens, of
Apache county, who caught four of the
sheep faction In a house at Holbrook.
The four broke from the house by four
different routes, through doors and
windows, hoping to pot the sheriff by a
divided fire. All alone he calmly
started to pump his Winchester rifle,
apparently heedless of the rain ol'lead.
When he had finished the four,w(ire
dead, and the cool little sheriff had' hot
a scratch. At the last only a single
male of the Graham blood remained
alive. He gave np the light and fled to
the Salt River valley where he mar
ried and settled down to a quiet farm
life. While marketing his first crop of
grain he was shot from ambush on the
road to Tempe. The deed was done by
two unmasked horsemen, ideptified by
two young women as Ed Tewksbury
and his right-hand man, John Rhodes.
The latter was rather summarily dis
charged from custody by a justice of
the peace, after a narrow escape from
death at the hands of Graham's young
widow, who had brought her husband's
trusty revolver to th' court room.
Tewksbury was found guilty of murder
in the first degree But n sharp law
yer found that the clerk of the court
had failed to enter the plea of "Not
Guilty," though the notes of the court
stenographer showed the plea had been
made in proper form; so the care was
twice retired with hung juries, and
finally the prisoner was turned loose.
I believe ho is at present a constable at
Globe camp.
DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE
In.
Ninety-Six is Stricken
With
Apoplexy.
Bath, Maine, Sept. Arthur Sewall,
tho democratic candidate for vice pres
ident in '96, was stricken with apoplexy
at ten o'clock last Sunday night. He
is resting comfortably and fcteadily im
proving. Delegates from Coconino County.
The following gentlemen "will attend
the territorial democratic convention.
All are good true men and will vote
for Mark Smith for congress: E. T.
McGonigle, Henry Slosson, E. E. Ellin
wood. ,1. E. Rulfin, Robert Hennossy,
T. A. Rickol, J. J. Donahue, S. V. Clay,
Ex.
Supply of Copper.
The Metul Reporter, of New York,
says of the red metal: There has been
talk lately that the visible supply of
copper is light. At the end of January
the visible supply, .according to Mor
ton's figures., was 21,337 tons. On Aug.
15 tho European visible supply wo3 33,
000 tons. This was the largest stork
sinco August 31, 1897, when Merton &.
Co. gave the stock as33,2fi7 tons. Mean
time the price of co'pper has risen from
59 2s. 6d. to 74 8s. 9d..
Copper production has not increased
materially during two years of excep
tionally high prices. Exports say it
takes two years to turn a copper pros
pect into a producer of metal. We are
approaching the period when the pros
pects of two years back will becorao
producers.
Consumption of the metal goes on at
a good rate and the market may at any
moment resume greater activity. Cop
per sways its potent ceptor over all
metals, and with new developments and
enterprises for its use both at home
and abroad, it certainly looks encour
aging to copper interests for a long
time to come nothing can take tho
place of copper successfully.
CHINA'S SECRET SOCIETIES.
The Leading; Men Are Those Who
Have Been Dlsnppolnted In
Trying to Obt"ln Office.
The most important of those socle
ties, are known under the names of the
"Trinity," the "Poignard," the "Pure
Tea," the "Knife's Sect," the "Vem
phar" and the most widely 6pread
among- the cultured classes i& called
"Heaven, Earth, Man," says a Paris pa
per. The society of the Boxers is a branch
from the "Closed Hand," and they
muet have been called jo by some Eng
lish sporting men residing in China.
The mother society is one of those in
numerable associations which exist in
the Celestial empire, as there existed
in Spain- the "Black Hand," in Italy
the "Carbonari," the "Mafia," the
"Camorra," etc. China, with its dense
population and democratic regime, is
a benighted1 land for sucn associations.
They disguise themselves under all
kinds of inoffensive appearances, phi
lanthropic, philosophic" or utilitarian
Thus- the "Closed Hand" claims to be
merely a gymnastic association, with
out any religious or philosophic tend
encies. It aims at a race war, a war
of revenge, against the Manchus, the
conquerors of China. But its branch,
the Boxers, leaves to the future the
settlement of that question, and1 aims
at the destruction of the Europeans,
whose infiltration into China is of
more recent date and- is soire, if unre
stricted, to absorb and' conquer peace
fully the Chinese race as thoroughly
as it has been subjugated by the Man
chus. These associations include all the
disappointed men who have passed
those examinations without which no
office can be obtained in China, but
which do not guarantee the holding
of such offices, for there are more ap
plicants than places. lese are at the
head of most of the secret societies.
They teach to the uneducated mem
bers that the invasion of foreigners
has caused the misery and want of
workjrecently so prevalent in China.
NEW FACTS ABOUT MALARIA.
What the Researches of a German
Salentlst In New Guiana
Hare Revealed..
In a recent issue of the Deutsche
Medizinische Woekenschrift there ia
an interesting account of the discov
eries made by Prof. Koch in German
New Guinea in regard' to malaria. The
professor began his investigations at
Stephansort, and learned that 25 per
cent, of the population of that place
were suffering from malaria. Out of
21 Europeans, 12 were sick; out of
240 Chinese, 63; out of 209 Malays,
53, and out of 264 Melanesians, 29. In
New Hanover not a single Melanesian
was afflicted with the malady, where
as out of 19 Melanesians of Gardner's
islands 9 were ill. In King William's
Land, as in Java, Prof. Koch found' a
large number of native children in
fected with the disease, and as a re
sult he maintains that only by a thor
ough examination of the children can
it be ascertained whether any dis
trict is infected or not
The entire coast of King William'a
Land is, he thinks, infected, while
the neigh ooring islands seem to .be
more or less free from the disease.
The presence of malaria in some placec
and' not in others may De accounted
for in a measure by the rormation of
the land and by the unusual activity
of the pestiferous Anophelis flies.. It
would be unwise, however, says Prof.
Koch, to attach too much weight to
these factors, andi especially to the
latter, since these flies are to be found
in region which are wholly free from
malaria.
Pour to One.
An English officer in Malta stopped,
in riding, to ask a native the way. He
was answered by a shrug of the shoul
ders, and a "No speak English."
"You're a fool, then," said the officer.
But the man knew enough English to
ask:
"Do you understand Maltese?"
"No."
"Do you know Arabic?"
"No."
"Do you know Italian?"
"No."
"Do you know Greek?
"No."
"Then you four fools. I only one I"
Counterfeit Coiree.
Unroasted coffee berries are often
made from oat and rye flour and corn
meal. The natural aroma of these
grains is destroyed by some process,
and after the proper amount of coffee
aroma 1 added the berries are formed
and caused to maintain their shape.
Annexes the Transvaal.
London, Sept. 4. A dispatch from
Roberts announces the issuance of u
formal proclamation annexing the
Transvaal.
DRIVING POWER
Of CHAEEEE
Materially Assisted in
Relief of Legation.
BKITISH GOVERNMENT WILL NOT
Commit Itself france favors
Peace, but Doubts With
drawal of Troops. j
Washington, Sept. 4. Tho war de
partment makes' public the following
from Major Barry:
"Taku General Chaffee has every
thing well in hand. His driving power
materially assisted the prompt relief of
the legation, and the condition of the
troops is good."
London, Sept. -1. Pending a full re
port from the British minister at Pek
ing, the British government will not
commit itself regarding the future
steps in China. The trend of official
opinion seems to favor retirement from
Peking to Tien Tsin, but not, the evac
uation of China.
Paris, Sept. 4. France has not yet
replied to Russia's note regarding the
withdrawal of troops from Peking.
Delca'se, the minister of foreign affairs,
and Prince Oroussow, the Russian am
bassador, went to Rambouilla today to
confer the decoration of the Russian
order of Standrew upon President Lou
bet. It is believed this will give an op
portunity for an exchange of views that
will affect the ministerial meeting
scheduled for tomorrow. France fav
ors peace, but is not sure that the with
drawal of the troops is the quickest
method to obtain it.
Many papers continue to express dis
trust of the intentions of several of the
powers', especially Great Britain and
France, claiming tbey have separate
plans regarding the Yang-Tso valley
and the southern provincos. So far as
Russia is concerned, the German press
is not exercised, because it has been
officially admitted by Germany that
Germany does not oppose any Russian
plans affecting the northern provinces,
as not touching Germany's commercial
or political interest.
The belief is generally held here by
both the government and the press that
Count von Waldersee will find plenty
to do after his arrival in China, even if
his command is restricted to the pro
vince of Pe-Chi-Li. The leading cen
trist organ tho Cologne VolksZeltung,
forms an exception to this rule sound
ing a warning against von Waldersee's
overstepping the bounds drawn by
Count von Buelow.
Berlin, Sept. 4. An official dis
patch from Taku announces the receipt
of a telegram from Peking dated Au
gust 25, saying the Germans have
taken possession of a hill in the Impe
rial city. Two thousand additional
Italian troops have reached Taku.
Shanghai, Sept. 4. It is reported
that an Imperial edict has been issued
at Tni Yuan Fu appointing LI Hnng
Chang Yung Lu, Hsu Tung (tutor to
the heir apparent) and Prince Chang
commissioners to negotiate peace.
Chicago, Sept. 4. A dispatch to the
Record from Shanghai says the Amer
ican Associations have just met, and
protest against the withdrawal of the
Americans from Peking, and implore
the president to refuse to recognize the
Empress Dowager and Earl Li, and to
lend his influence toward the restora
tion of the Emperor.
BLUER IS SCOUTING.
Boers Hold Pass and Artillery Duel
Sunday.
Crocodile River Valley, Trans
veal, Sept 4. Buller is reconoltering
the Boor position in the mountain over
looking LydenbUrg. Botha, with two
rhousund Burghers is holding the pass
tnd an artillery duel -was maintained
all day Sunday.
New Steamship Line.
NkV Yorr, Sept. 4. Tho American
Hawaiian Steamship company has be
gan service to Pacific coast ports and
the Hawaiian Islands by despatching
tho steamship American for the Pacific
coast by way of the Straits of Magel-1 campaign in Kentucky was opened to
Ian. The establishment of this new j day by both parties.
line is of much Importance to the gen-
eral trade. There will be six vessels ' Bad BoboniC Plaque.
in connection with this service. All of i GLASGOW, Sept. 4. Thirteen cases
them are larger than the boats now on 1 0 bubunic plague today; 106 suspects.
1 gaged in the coast trade. The line
will be one of the most important
among the Pacific ports, as it estab
lishes a permanent snipping line from
New York to the Pacific and Hawaiian
ports, a need that has long been felt in
the oast.
FIGHTING IN MANILA.
An
Engagement Reported and
the
Enemy Lose Heavily.
Washington, Sept. 4. The war de
partment has received the following
from MacArthur:
"General Hughes reports an out
break in Bohol, and Lieutenant Lovak,
of the Forty-fourth volunteers, also re
ports an engagement near Carmen,
Bohol, in which our losses were orte
killed and six wounded. The enemy's
loss in killed is one hundred and twen
ty. Bohol is an island in the southern
part of the Archipelagd, four hundred
miles from Manila.
RED-HEADED GIRLS. '
Fortunately the Much Derided Colui
la Pound In All Countries of
the World.
The geographical distribution ol
red-headed girls is, fortunately, wide.
They can be found in every inhabited
quarter of the world, says the St.
Louis Republic.
The so-called dark races are fre
quently glorified by glowing lock.
The Spaniards are swarthy as a race,
but the purest-blooded Castilians fre--quently
show traces of their VU
igothio blood by blue eyes and red
hair. The Infanta Eulalfe, who visit
ed this country in 189!, is red-headed.
Bed-haired Italians are fairly nu
merous in Italy. They are most nu
merous in the northern provinces,
where there is the greatest infusion
of German blood.
And there is no girl in the world
prettier than a red-haired Italian or
Spaniard, except it be a red-haired
American.
In Ireland a red-haired girl is made
miserable by being called a "Dane."
This epithet is a legacy of a thousand
years or more from the time when
the Danes did, override the coasts of
Britain.
In a similar manner the Norsemen,
who invaded Sicily centuries ago and
Intermarried with the inhabitants,
left descendants with gleaming brain
thatches.
The Turks are a light-haired, blue
eyed raoe, and their children are
everywhere scattered about Asia and
northern Africa.
And. where there aren't any red
haired girls by nature as among the
Moors and Arabs the glowing locks
are commonest of alL The women
all dye their jetty tresses to & most
lovely red with henna.
GRANTS TO FOREIGN POWERS.
The Liberal Territorial
China Has Made trom
to Time.
CeMloas
TUaa
Each conflict in which China has en
gaged has resulted in a loss of terri
tory. The principal cessions mad by
the Mongol government as the price of
fwuwe iicv; UHU IUC lUliUHlUg iOC
Island of Formosa was ceded to Japan
in 1895, after the war with China. In
1897 Germany seized the port of Kiou
Chou on the east coast of the Shantunc
peninsula, her excuse for so doing be
ing a massacre of missionaries which
had taken place, there. Two months
later she received from China a 9J-year
lease of the port and district. Ia 1898
Russia obtained from China a 25-year
lease of Port Arthur, Talienwan and
their adjacent territories and waters.
The lease can be extended by mutual
agreement. The same year the Chinese
government gave permission for Great
Britain to occupy Wei-Hal-Wei for as
long a period as Russia shall hold Port
Arthur. To compensate France for
the concessions given to Great Britain
and Russia a 99-year lease was given
her of the bay of Kwang-Chau-Wan, on
the coast opposite the islandof Hainan,
and last year two islands at the en
tranced the bay were definitely ceded
to her. Hong-Kong was ceded to Great
Britain in 1841.
Forsttsn School la Athans.
Four foreign countries Germany,
France, England and the United States
now have schools at Athens. The
United States school has 13 students
and 23 colleges contribute to its sup
port. The school has distinguished
itself by its explorations at Corinth, ac
cording to the Scientific American.
The students go to Corinth vacations,
rent a house and pursue their investi
gations. Boxers and Boxers.
The New York boxers will not fight
the Chinese Boxers, says the Chicago
Record, unless some arrangements for
gate receipts ca" be made.
Woodruff Will Accept.
Saratoga, Sept. 1, Timothy Wood
ruff today decided to accept a re-nomination
for lieutenant.governor.
Kentucky Campaign Open.
Frankeort. Sent. 4. The political
mm same
PLAlfORM
Bryan and Roosevelt
Both Speak.
AT THE ELECTRIC PARK
The Two Aspirants for Office De
liver Addresses to the v
K Same AldSenceiL
Chicago, Sept. 4.-Yesterday Colonel
William Jennings Bryan and Governor
Theodore Roosevelt stood on the Log
gia of the Auditorium Hotel while or
ganized labor passed before them in
review. Thousands were in line and
the distinguished guests were both
cheered to the echo. Yesterday
afternoon they spoke at Electric
Park, from the same platform. Gov.
Roosevelt said:
"It is impossible to overestimate the
far reaching influence of your associa
tions. Each group of men has its spe
cial interests yet there are higher, .
broader, deeper interests which apply
to all alike
"The more a healthy American sees of
his fellows, the deeper grows his con
viction that the chief troubles come
from mutual, misunderstanding, and
the great-need is fellow feeling which
comes by association. If only our peo
ple can be thrown together wes need
not feel but they will acquire a genuine
repsect'for'each other thatlwill lead to
fair play. Before us loom industrial
problems vast In importance and com
plexity. No man can be certain that
lie has found the entire solution of
these problems, but each of us must
strive manfully to bring about a solu
tion. Yet we may remain sure of one
thing, there can be no substitution for
the elemental virtues of truth, courage,
justice thrift, industry, common 9ense
and sympathy."
Mr. Bryan, saldi
"Labor organizations are the product
of Industrtal conditions. An individual
found himself at a disadvantage when
dealing with corporate employers, and
organization not only enables him te
contend for his rights on terms more
equal but stimulates him to study and
understand the conditions which' sur
round him.';
He then reviewed the victories of
organized labor, citing the introduc
tion of the secret ballot at the polls,
the amelioration of the evils of child
iabor, shortening the hours of toil, and
the advocaCy of abitratlon. continuing
he said:
"The attempt of the use of injunc
tion depriving the laboring man of the
right of trial by jury should alarm
people, for while the wage earner Is
first to feel the effects of the principal
which underlies government by injunc
tion, it is so far-reaching that no one
can hope to escape It ultimately.
"A thing forbidden by injunction is
either legal or illegal. If legal the
judge usurps the functions of the legis
lature; if illegal, an Injunction is un
necessary,"
Mr. Bryan recommended an effort to
obtain the election of senators by pop
'ular vote, and the submission of vital
questions to the people; also the estab
lishment of a labor bureau with a cab
inet officer at the head, and declared
that the withdrawal of the guarantees
of the constitution from the Puerto
Rlcans is tyranny, concluding with an
appeal to the worklngman throughout
the country to bring the nation back
to its ancient landmark.
A SOLDIER'S DUTY.
Obeyed
Orders and Could Not Visit
Dying Wife.
Denver, Sept. 4. Mrs. Corliss, wife
of Col. A. W. Corliss, of the Second in
fantry, died today. Her husband was
en route to China with his regiment.
Because his orders were urgent he
would not delay to visit the bedside of
his dying wife.
Democratic Executive Committee.
Chicago, Sept. 4. The members of
the national democratic executive com
mittee held a confererce today with
party leaders from various states to
discuss conditions and arrange plane.
The Akron Riots.
Akron, Sept. 4. Nineteen persons
have been arrested for alleged com
plicity in the recent rioting in this city.
A special grand jury will probably be
called today.
i